Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system

Design techniques are presented for a very high frequency telemetry system capable of transmitting short radio frequency pulse signals from the body of a fish to an aircraft flying over a river. The system design has considered the water chemistry and river turbulence of the Athabasca River in the A...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bidgood, B. F., Baldwin, H. A.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490
https://doi.org/10.7939/R37P8TH6H
id ftunivalberta:oai:era.library.ualberta.ca:41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivalberta:oai:era.library.ualberta.ca:41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490 2023-05-15T15:25:59+02:00 Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system Bidgood, B. F. Baldwin, H. A. 1978 https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490 https://doi.org/10.7939/R37P8TH6H English eng https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490 doi:10.7939/R37P8TH6H This material is provided under educational reproduction permissions included in Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development's Copyright and Disclosure Statement, see terms at http://www.environment.alberta.ca/copyright.html. This Statement requires the following identification: \"The source of the materials is Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development http://www.environment.gov.ab.ca/. The use of these materials by the end user is done without any affiliation with or endorsement by the Government of Alberta. Reliance upon the end user's use of these materials is at the risk of the end user. Oil Sands AOSERP Fish Tar Sands Radio Telemetry Athabasca River Alberta Monitoring Report 1978 ftunivalberta https://doi.org/10.7939/R37P8TH6H 2022-08-22T20:10:24Z Design techniques are presented for a very high frequency telemetry system capable of transmitting short radio frequency pulse signals from the body of a fish to an aircraft flying over a river. The system design has considered the water chemistry and river turbulence of the Athabasca River in the Alberta Oil Sands Environmental Research Program study area and five specie of fish indigenous to that region. Surgical implant procedures are described and preliminary field test results are presented. Radio transmitters were designed as superior to ultrasonic transmitters to monitor seasonal migration patterns of fish in the Athabasca River system. Radio transmitters at a frequency of 150 MHz will permit interrogation of radio tagged fish by aircraft fitted with a three element yagi antenna pointed downward when mounted under the wing of a light aircraft. A sealed, lithium primary battery was the chosen power source of a transmitter with an 8 to 10 millisecond pulse length and a pulse interval of one pulse per second. Field surgical procedures reduced stresses imposed on laboratory held experimental fish. Preliminary field tests indicated interrogation of radio tagged fish with a light aircraft was feasible. Report Athabasca River University of Alberta: Era - Education and Research Archive Athabasca River
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alberta: Era - Education and Research Archive
op_collection_id ftunivalberta
language English
topic Oil Sands
AOSERP
Fish
Tar Sands
Radio Telemetry
Athabasca River
Alberta
Monitoring
spellingShingle Oil Sands
AOSERP
Fish
Tar Sands
Radio Telemetry
Athabasca River
Alberta
Monitoring
Bidgood, B. F.
Baldwin, H. A.
Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
topic_facet Oil Sands
AOSERP
Fish
Tar Sands
Radio Telemetry
Athabasca River
Alberta
Monitoring
description Design techniques are presented for a very high frequency telemetry system capable of transmitting short radio frequency pulse signals from the body of a fish to an aircraft flying over a river. The system design has considered the water chemistry and river turbulence of the Athabasca River in the Alberta Oil Sands Environmental Research Program study area and five specie of fish indigenous to that region. Surgical implant procedures are described and preliminary field test results are presented. Radio transmitters were designed as superior to ultrasonic transmitters to monitor seasonal migration patterns of fish in the Athabasca River system. Radio transmitters at a frequency of 150 MHz will permit interrogation of radio tagged fish by aircraft fitted with a three element yagi antenna pointed downward when mounted under the wing of a light aircraft. A sealed, lithium primary battery was the chosen power source of a transmitter with an 8 to 10 millisecond pulse length and a pulse interval of one pulse per second. Field surgical procedures reduced stresses imposed on laboratory held experimental fish. Preliminary field tests indicated interrogation of radio tagged fish with a light aircraft was feasible.
format Report
author Bidgood, B. F.
Baldwin, H. A.
author_facet Bidgood, B. F.
Baldwin, H. A.
author_sort Bidgood, B. F.
title Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
title_short Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
title_full Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
title_fullStr Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
title_full_unstemmed Research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
title_sort research, development, and field testing of a new fish tracking system
publishDate 1978
url https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490
https://doi.org/10.7939/R37P8TH6H
geographic Athabasca River
geographic_facet Athabasca River
genre Athabasca River
genre_facet Athabasca River
op_relation https://era.library.ualberta.ca/items/41ac253f-6c9e-40ba-921e-2db7c47de490
doi:10.7939/R37P8TH6H
op_rights This material is provided under educational reproduction permissions included in Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development's Copyright and Disclosure Statement, see terms at http://www.environment.alberta.ca/copyright.html. This Statement requires the following identification: \"The source of the materials is Alberta Environment and Sustainable Resource Development http://www.environment.gov.ab.ca/. The use of these materials by the end user is done without any affiliation with or endorsement by the Government of Alberta. Reliance upon the end user's use of these materials is at the risk of the end user.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7939/R37P8TH6H
_version_ 1766356562245320704